page three 4ieUi tIfl4 YELLOW High-81 Low-48 Clear and ho) Saturday, May 20, 1972 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN News Phone: 764-0552 7 . w . .omb hits Pentagon; business as usual hrowing (Own the gea1i1iet Sen. Hubert Humphrey {D-Minn) announces he is challenging Sen. George McGovern (D-SD) to a series of television' debates in California. HIGH HOPES. 1xon departs for summit conference WASHINGTON OP--President Nixon said last night on the eve of today's departure for Moscow that he has hope for real progress in three areas. There is he said, a "real possibility" for agreement at the Moscow summit talks on arms limitations, trade rela- tions and cooperation in space. Meanwhile, it was announced in Moscow that Nixon will make a 15-minute television speech to the Russian people during his visit. The date for the speech has been set at Sunday, May WASHINGTON (-- FBI experts sifted rubble of a bomb - shattered Pentagon restroom yesterday for clues to determine who caused a post-midnight explosion in apparent protest against U.S. air and sea attacks on North Vietnam. Antiwar activits told news organizatiors "we attacked the Pentagon. the tcenter of the Ameriean military command." Pentagon officials reported "no appriciable slowdown" in operations of the huge defense department headquarters, al- tho h ti-her security measures w-1- i- Efect. Alv 't 18 pOrsons who nor- i'liy wooed near te fourth- floor exloson scene were ta- a- to use their offices, but olif"wise it taoo crd that most of th building's 27 500 military and civilian workrs were on a business-as-usual basis. Pentagon authorities said they had no estimate of damage and expected none at least until Monday, after they make a de- tailed examination of the dam- aged area. It is center td i the outer corridor, the equivalent of two city blocks from the office suites of the Secretary of the Air Force Robert Seamans, and Gen. John Ryan, Air Force chief of staff. It was apparent that the dam- age was extensive. The women's restroom was ruined, a 2 -foot hole was blown through its floor, its ceil- ing caved in, and huge sections of two restroom wall gone. Thousands of gallons of water gushed frons shattered pipes and poured into a shopping con- course three flights down. Water also caused what was described as minimal damage to an Air Force data processing center containing some $15 mil- lion worth of equipment. After a 74-hour interruption, the center was back in operation and officials said no data was lost. There was evidence that the bombing may have been con- nected with the m it i t a n t "Weatherman" sect of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). One of the first alerts report- ed came at 1:05 a.m. yesterday when a caller identifying him- self as "The Weatherman" no- tified the New York Post that "we have just bombed the office of the secretary of the Air Force in the Pentagon." Similar tele- phone calls were made to several other ews media. A reporter from the New York Post found a letter in a phone booth near the newspaper's printing plant, signed, "Weath- erman Underground No. 12." The letter said: "We are acting at a time when growing U.S. air and naval shell- ing are being carried out against the Vietnamese: while U.S. mines and warships are used to block the harbors of the Demo- cratic Republic of Vietnam: while plans for even more esca- lation are being made in Wash- in ton." Building officials had already ordered that tighter security be invoked at 7 a.m. yesterday in preparation for antiwar demon- strations Monday, when peace groups have announced they will attempt to seal off access to the defense department headquar- ters. Although the Pentagon has been the object of dozens of antiwar demonstrations over the past eight years, this was the first time that any bombs had ever been used against it. Voting law ruled illegal DETROIT IP)--Three federal judges in Detroit declared un- constitutional Thursday the state law requiring six month's residency for state voting rights. State election officials said they do not know how many, more people will now be eligible to vote in the August state primary and the November pres- idential election. The only residency require- ment for voting that remains under the new ruling is the cur- rent registration law. Persons must be registered to vote no later than the fifth Friday be- fore an election. Thursday's court decision, the outcome of an 18-month-old Warren case, comes after a re- cent Supreme Court ruling that nullified Tennessee's one-year residency requirement. The American Civil Liberties Union, which filed the suit, heralded the decisiq~s as "a- revolution in the whole concept of electoral ights." The decision was delivered by Federal District Judges Damon Keith and Lawrence GuboWr and Appeals Judge George Edwards. 28. The President, speaking in- formally to newsmen at a White House reception, said previous East-West summits "added up to cosmetics-all froth and very little substance." The chief executive cautioned. "I would not raise hopes too, high because there are some knotty problems to be solved." But he reported receiving within the pastr48mhours a personal mese from Communist party chairman Leonid Brezhnev that "indicated a positive attitude." The President said the mes- sage was brought to him Thurs- day at his camp David retreat by the Soviet ambassador here, Anatoly Dobrynin. Nixon said that as President he has engaged in "a very great volume" of direct and written exchanges of views with Brezh- nev-exchanges not made public at the time. Although Nixon said he met Brezhnev only once, and briefly in 1959, he believes he and the Russian well understand where their differences lie and at the summit will "come quickly to the problem." The President said that apart from arms limitations, trade and space cooperation, both the United States and the Soviet Union have submitted other items for the agenda. He said these would include "Vietnam and other areas of the world where the United States and the Soviet Union do sometimes have conflicting in- terests." Nixon met earlier in addition with Democratic and Republican leaders of Congress to discuss his 16,585-mile journey. -Associated Press INVESTIGATORS CONFER at the site of yesterday's bombing in a Pentagon restroom. ANTI-SEXISM FOCUS: U' women scientists form new organizaton By NANCY ROSENBAUM Two months ago, a few women from the University's bio- chemistry department organized a fledgling group of women in- volved in scientific careers. Since then, the group, called Michigan Women in Science, has gained student and staff members representing twenty of the University's natural science departments-a total of some 5$ women. The group's primary goal is to provide information for women seeking scientific careers-particularly information useful in fight- ing discrimination. To that end, the group is sponsoring three workshops, to be held in the coming months. The group is also currently compiling a central file which wilt contain pertinent information on affirmative action plan reports, University policy statements, and survey reports on the number and positions of University women as well as the percentage of female PhD's in each field. Women in Science is also concerned with making sure that the University's new job posting procedure is effectively implemented. The new procedure, as outlined by Allan Smith, vice president for academic affairs, requires that all academic positions from "instructor" through "professor" be advertised at least two months before a final selection is made. A spokesperson for the group commented that a major aim is to "circumvent the inequities which exist in the system" and to assert that women's careers should be taken seriously. "Only five per cent of the University's PhD's in the physical and biologscal sciences are women and we're trying to discover why," she said. Another major objective of the organization is to encourage social interaction among female scientists, and reinforce career women to face mutual problems. A counseling program for undergraduate women interested in science is currently being constructed and a program for high school students may be set up in addition. The three workshops planned for this summer and fall include one on the "Identity of Scientists"-scheduled for Sat., June 24-which will discuss the philosophical implications of the woman's role as scientist. Planned for late July is a session on "The problems of two- career families," which will concentrate on such problems as See 'U', Page 12